An Ozempic savings card in Canada can cut your out-of-pocket costs by $50 to $300+ per month, depending on your insurance status and province. Novo Nordisk offers a patient support program, pharmacies run their own discount cards, and several third-party programs exist to help Canadians afford semaglutide. This guide covers every savings option available in 2026, with step-by-step instructions for each one. If you are paying full price for Ozempic, you are likely spending more than you need to.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider or pharmacist before making decisions about your medication.

What Is an Ozempic Savings Card and How Does It Work in Canada?

An Ozempic savings card is a manufacturer or pharmacy discount program that reduces the amount you pay at the counter for your Ozempic prescription. In Canada, these programs work differently than in the United States. There is no direct copay card system like Americans use through their insurance. Instead, Canadian patients access savings through a combination of Novo Nordisk's patient support program, pharmacy-specific discount cards, provincial drug plans, and private insurance.

No single program will make Ozempic free. The retail price for Ozempic in Canada sits between $250 and $350 per month for most doses (see our full breakdown of Ozempic cost in Canada). But stacking two or three of these programs together can bring your real cost down to $0 to $75 per month.

Novo Nordisk Patient Support Program (OzempicCare)

Novo Nordisk, the manufacturer of Ozempic, runs a Canadian patient support program called OzempicCare (sometimes referred to as the Novo Nordisk Patient Assistance Program). This is the first place every Ozempic patient in Canada should start.

The program provides:

  • Medication counselling and injection training
  • Financial assistance for eligible patients without adequate insurance
  • Starter packs or trial supplies in some cases
  • Ongoing support from a dedicated care coordinator

Detail | Information

--- | ---

Program Name | OzempicCare / Novo Nordisk Patient Support Program

Eligibility | Canadian residents with a valid Ozempic prescription

Insurance Required? | No, but uninsured or underinsured patients receive the most financial benefit

Cost to Enroll | Free

How to Apply | Through your prescribing physician, or call 1-800-465-4334

Financial Assistance | Case-by-case basis; may cover partial or full cost for qualifying patients

Starter Supply | Available in some provinces through physician offices

Support Included | Injection training, nurse follow-up, lifestyle coaching

Your doctor can enrol you directly. The program coordinator will review your insurance situation and province of residence, then determine what financial support is available. Patients without any private insurance tend to receive the most meaningful help.

How to Apply to OzempicCare

Step-by-step process:

  • Ask your prescribing doctor to submit an OzempicCare enrollment form on your behalf.
  • Provide your insurance details (or confirm that you have no private coverage).
  • A care coordinator contacts you within 5 to 10 business days.
  • Complete your intake assessment, which includes a financial needs evaluation.
  • Receive your support package, which may include a starter supply and ongoing cost assistance.
  • Maintain contact with your coordinator for refill support and program renewals.

Patients who already have partial insurance can still enrol. The program may cover the gap between what your insurer pays and the retail price [1].

Pharmacy Discount Cards for Ozempic in Canada

Several Canadian pharmacies offer their own discount card programs. These are separate from Novo Nordisk's program and can sometimes be combined with it for extra savings. If you want to know where to fill your prescription for less, check out our guide on Ozempic at Costco.

Program | Estimated Discount | Eligibility | How to Apply

--- | --- | --- | ---

Costco Pharmacy Membership | 5% to 15% off retail | Costco members (pharmacy is open to non-members in most provinces) | Fill your prescription at a Costco pharmacy

Shoppers Drug Mart Optimum | PC Optimum points (equivalent to 2% to 5% back) | Anyone with a PC Optimum card | Sign up for PC Optimum and link to pharmacy profile

Rexall Be Well Program | Be Well points (equivalent to 2% to 4% back) | Anyone with a Be Well card | Register at rexall.ca or in-store

Canada Drug Warehouse | Up to 10% off select medications | Open to all Canadians | Order through canadadrugwarehouse.com

Online Pharmacy Aggregators | Variable, 5% to 20% off retail | Valid Canadian prescription | Compare prices at pharmacycompass.ca

Independent Pharmacy Negotiation | Variable (ask for a cash-pay discount) | Uninsured patients paying out of pocket | Ask your pharmacist directly

Costco pharmacy prices are consistently among the lowest in Canada for brand-name medications. You do not need a Costco membership to use their pharmacy in most provinces, thanks to pharmacy access laws [2]. The points-based programs at Shoppers and Rexall will not reduce your upfront cost, but they give you credit toward future purchases.

For patients who prefer online ordering, several licensed Canadian online pharmacies offer lower Ozempic pricing. Compare options in our guide on the cheapest semaglutide available.

Provincial Drug Plan Coverage and Savings by Province

Provincial coverage is one of the biggest variables in what you actually pay. Some provinces cover Ozempic through their public drug plan for type 2 diabetes patients. Others have more limited programs. Understanding your province's rules is the first step to maximizing savings.

For a full picture of insurance options, see our Ozempic insurance coverage guide.

Province | Public Drug Plan Coverage | Special Authorization Required? | Additional Savings Options

--- | --- | --- | ---

Ontario | Covered under Ontario Drug Benefit (ODB) for eligible patients with type 2 diabetes | Yes, Special Authorization needed | Trillium Drug Program for high out-of-pocket costs

British Columbia | Covered under BC PharmaCare for type 2 diabetes after metformin failure | Yes, Special Authority required | Fair PharmaCare income-based deductible

Alberta | Covered under Alberta Drug Benefit List (Group 66) | Yes, requires prior criteria | Non-Group coverage for seniors and low-income residents

Quebec | Covered under RAMQ public drug plan | Yes, with exception drug status | Premium assistance for low-income residents

Saskatchewan | Covered under Saskatchewan Drug Plan for type 2 diabetes | Yes, Exception Drug Status required | Special Support Program for financial hardship

Manitoba | Covered under Manitoba Pharmacare | Yes, with criteria | Income-based deductible program

Nova Scotia | Covered under Pharmacare Programs | Yes, Exception Status needed | Family Pharmacare for high costs relative to income

New Brunswick | Covered under NB Drug Plan for eligible groups | Yes, Special Authorization | Medicare and premium assistance programs

Newfoundland and Labrador | Covered under NLPDP for select groups | Yes, Special Authorization | Access and 65Plus plans

PEI | Covered under PEI Pharmacare | Yes | Generic Drug Program, Catastrophic Drug Program

Northwest Territories | Covered under NIHB and territorial plans | Varies | Extended Health Benefits

Nunavut | Covered under NIHB | Varies | Non-Insured Health Benefits

Yukon | Covered under Yukon Pharmacare | Yes | Chronic Disease Program

Most provinces require Special Authorization, which means your doctor must submit paperwork proving you meet specific clinical criteria, usually a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes and failure of first-line treatments like metformin [3].

If your province covers Ozempic, your out-of-pocket cost could drop to as little as $0 to $50 per month. The application process takes 2 to 6 weeks in most provinces.

Monthly Cost Savings Scenarios

Here is what Ozempic costs look like under different savings scenarios. These figures are based on the 1 mg maintenance dose, which retails for approximately $300 to $350 per month.

Savings Method | Estimated Monthly Cost | Monthly Savings vs. Retail ($330)

--- | --- | ---

Full retail (no coverage) | $300 to $350 | $0

Costco pharmacy only | $260 to $300 | $30 to $70

Provincial drug plan (approved) | $0 to $50 | $280 to $330

Private insurance (80% coverage) | $60 to $70 | $260 to $270

Novo Nordisk patient support (full) | $0 to $30 | $300 to $330

Private insurance + pharmacy discount | $40 to $60 | $270 to $290

Provincial plan + Novo Nordisk support | $0 | Up to $330

Online pharmacy (licensed Canadian) | $240 to $290 | $40 to $90

The best outcome happens when you stack programs. A patient with provincial coverage who also enrolls in OzempicCare may pay nothing at all. Even without a provincial plan, combining a pharmacy discount with private insurance often brings costs below $75 per month.

7 Ways to Reduce Your Ozempic Costs in Canada

Here are every major option, ranked from biggest to smallest potential savings.

1. Apply for Provincial Drug Plan Coverage

This is the single largest savings opportunity. If you qualify, your province pays most or all of the cost. Ask your doctor to submit a Special Authorization form. Processing times range from 2 to 6 weeks.

2. Enrol in Novo Nordisk's Patient Support Program

Call 1-800-465-4334 or ask your doctor to submit the enrollment form. Uninsured and underinsured patients receive the most financial support, but anyone with a prescription can access the program's non-financial resources.

3. Use Costco Pharmacy

Costco consistently offers the lowest pharmacy prices in Canada. You do not need a membership to fill prescriptions in most provinces. This alone can save $30 to $70 per month compared to a chain pharmacy.

4. Maximize Your Private Insurance

If you have workplace benefits, make sure Ozempic is on your plan's formulary. If it is not, your doctor can submit a prior authorization or appeal. Some plans require you try metformin first. For help getting started, read our guide on how to get Ozempic.

5. Ask About Generic Semaglutide

As of May 2026, Health Canada has approved two generic semaglutide products: Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (April 28, 2026) and Apotex (May 1, 2026), with both generics now shipping to Canadian pharmacies since May 20, 2026. Seven more applications are still under Health Canada review. Once three or more generics are on the market,

Generic Semaglutide at In-Person Canadian Pharmacies

Cash retail prices for generic semaglutide at Canadian pharmacies are now coming in below the telehealth alternatives, based on early Canadian consumer reports. Costco Pharmacy is the lowest reliable option at roughly $88 to $99 per month (confirmed pickups: $88.88 GTA, $88 Ontario, $99 Laval, $91 Medicine Hat). Walmart and Loblaws No Frills typically come in around $95 to $110 per month. Shoppers Drug Mart, Rexall and London Drugs are running roughly $100 to $120 per month (one Halifax-area Shoppers fill reported $113 for the 0.25mg starter dose). Apotex's Apo-Semaglutide Injection began shipping to Canadian pharmacies on May 20, 2026, with Dr. Reddy's generic also launching in May 2026.

That makes in-person pharmacies — especially Costco — meaningfully cheaper than telehealth providers for generic semaglutide. Felix Health and Hims Canada both list $149 per month all-in for the same generic Apo-Semaglutide on their public pricing pages. For most Canadians with a valid prescription, walking it into a local pharmacy is now the cheapest reliable path.

Pricing context: per the Globe and Mail, Apotex's published wholesale price is $78.14 for a four-week supply — roughly one-third of brand-name Ozempic's $240.48 wholesale price. Retail estimates above reflect that wholesale plus each chain's standard dispensing fee and markup. See also coverage from CBC News on the Canadian launch. Under the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance framework, the maximum public drug plan price for generic semaglutide is approximately $114 per four-week supply with two manufacturers approved, dropping to roughly $80 once a third manufacturer launches.

6. Compare Online Pharmacy Prices

Licensed Canadian online pharmacies often price Ozempic lower than brick-and-mortar chains. Make sure any online pharmacy you use is accredited by the Canadian International Pharmacy Association (CIPA) or your provincial pharmacy regulator.

7. Negotiate a Cash-Pay Discount

If you are paying out of pocket with no insurance, tell your pharmacist. Many independent pharmacies offer a cash-pay discount of 5% to 15% when you ask. It is worth having that conversation.

Step-by-Step: How to Apply for Each Savings Program

Step | Novo Nordisk Patient Support | Provincial Drug Plan | Costco Pharmacy | Private Insurance Optimization

--- | --- | --- | --- | ---

1 | Ask your doctor to submit the OzempicCare enrollment form | Ask your doctor to submit a Special Authorization form | Locate your nearest Costco pharmacy | Review your benefits booklet for Ozempic coverage

2 | Provide insurance details and financial information | Doctor provides clinical documentation (diagnosis, prior treatments) | Bring your valid prescription | If not covered, ask your doctor to write a prior authorization letter

3 | Wait for coordinator contact (5 to 10 business days) | Provincial plan reviews application (2 to 6 weeks) | Fill your prescription at the Costco pharmacy counter | Submit the prior authorization to your insurer

4 | Complete financial needs assessment | Receive approval or denial letter | Pay the discounted price at checkout | Wait for approval (1 to 4 weeks)

5 | Receive support package and ongoing coordination | If approved, fill prescription under your provincial plan | Set up auto-refill for consistent savings | If denied, file an appeal with supporting medical evidence

6 | Renew annually or as directed by coordinator | Renew authorization as required (usually every 1 to 2 years) | Repeat monthly | Resubmit annually during benefits renewal

What About American-Style Copay Cards?

You might see ads online for Ozempic copay cards, savings cards, or manufacturer coupons. Most of these are designed for U.S. patients and do not work in Canada. The American healthcare and pharmacy system processes manufacturer discounts differently than the Canadian system.

In Canada, the equivalent is the Novo Nordisk Patient Support Program. There is no printable coupon or card you hand to a pharmacist for an instant discount. Instead, the financial assistance is arranged through the support program coordinator based on your individual situation.

If a website claims to offer an Ozempic coupon valid in Canada, be cautious. Verify it through your pharmacist or directly with Novo Nordisk Canada before providing any personal information.

Who Qualifies for the Most Savings?

The biggest savings go to patients who meet two criteria:

  • A type 2 diabetes diagnosis (this unlocks provincial drug plan coverage in most provinces)
  • No private insurance or limited private insurance (this maximizes support from Novo Nordisk's program)

Patients using Ozempic off-label for weight loss face higher costs because provincial plans and most private insurers do not cover it for that indication. If you are using Ozempic for weight management, your main savings options are pharmacy discounts, cash-pay negotiations, and the Novo Nordisk support program (which may still offer partial assistance).

Tips for Stacking Multiple Savings Programs

Do not rely on just one program. The real savings come from combining two or three options together.

A common stacking strategy that works well:

  • Start with your provincial drug plan. Apply for Special Authorization through your doctor. If approved, this covers the majority of the cost.
  • Enrol in OzempicCare. Even with provincial coverage, the program provides support resources and can cover any remaining copay.
  • Fill at a low-cost pharmacy. If you have any residual out-of-pocket expense, filling at Costco or a competitive online pharmacy reduces it further.

For patients without provincial coverage:

  • Maximize private insurance first. Get a prior authorization if needed.
  • Enrol in OzempicCare to cover the gap between your insurance reimbursement and the full price.
  • Use a pharmacy discount (Costco, online pharmacy) to reduce the base price your insurer calculates against.

This stacking approach is how many Canadians bring their Ozempic cost to under $25 per month, or even $0 in the best cases [4].

Online Providers Cost Comparison

Most Canadians now access Ozempic through telehealth providers rather than in-person clinics. Below is how the main Canadian online providers compare for Ozempic prescribing, with MyRocky now our highest-rated option.

ProviderOzempic Monthly CostConsultation FeeCoverageLearn More
MyRockyFrom $300/month (lab work included)$99 one-time (includes lab work and first prescription)All 10 provinces (including QC and NB)Visit MyRocky
Felix HealthBrand $250 to $310 / Generic $149+Free (first), $40 follow-upAll provinces except QC and NBVisit Felix
Maple$250 to $310$69 one-timeAll provinces + territoriesVisit Maple
Hims CanadaPricing on consultIncluded in planON, BC, AB (expanding 2026)Visit Hims
Jill HealthPricing on assessmentPricing on assessmentSelect provincesVisit Jill
DooUPricing on assessment$45 one-timeAll provinces + territoriesVisit DooU
RavenPricing on assessmentPricing on assessment9 provincesVisit Raven

MyRocky is our highest-rated Canadian GLP-1 telehealth provider in 2026 (9.4/10). MyRocky operates its own LegitScript-certified pharmacy in Mississauga, employs Canadian-licensed MDs, nurse practitioners and pharmacists, and serves all 10 provinces (including Quebec and New Brunswick where Felix and Hims do not). The $99 one-time consultation includes lab work and the first prescription. Read our full MyRocky review.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there an Ozempic savings card available in Canada?

There is no printable savings card for Ozempic in Canada like the U.S. copay card programs. The Canadian equivalent is Novo Nordisk's OzempicCare patient support program, which provides financial assistance on a case-by-case basis. Enrol through your prescribing physician or by calling 1-800-465-4334.

How much does Ozempic cost per month in Canada without insurance?

Without any insurance or discount programs, Ozempic costs between $300 and $350 per month at most Canadian pharmacies. Costco pharmacies tend to be on the lower end. For a detailed cost breakdown, see our guide on Ozempic cost in Canada.

Can I use a U.S. Ozempic savings card at a Canadian pharmacy?

No. U.S. manufacturer savings cards and copay programs are not valid at Canadian pharmacies. The billing systems are different, and Canadian pharmacies cannot process American discount codes. Canadian patients should use the Novo Nordisk patient support program instead.

Does Ozempic get covered by provincial drug plans for weight loss?

In most provinces, Ozempic is only covered through public drug plans for type 2 diabetes, not for weight loss. Patients using it off-label for weight management will generally pay out of pocket. Some private insurers may cover it with a doctor's letter of medical necessity, but this varies widely.

How long does it take to get approved for the Novo Nordisk patient support program?

Most patients hear back from a care coordinator within 5 to 10 business days after their doctor submits the enrollment form. The full financial assessment and support arrangement can take 2 to 4 weeks from initial enrollment.

Will generic Ozempic be cheaper in Canada?

Yes. Health Canada approved Dr. Reddy's Laboratories' generic semaglutide on April 28, 2026 and Apotex's Apo-Semaglutide Injection on May 1, 2026, making Canada the first G7 country to do so. Both generics began shipping to Canadian pharmacies on May 20, 2026, with seven additional generic submissions still under revgeneric semaglutide guide for the full picture.

Sources

  1. Health Canada. "Drug Coverage in Canada." Government of Canada, 2024. https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/health-care-system/pharmaceuticals/access-insurance-coverage-prescription-medicines.html
  1. Competition Bureau Canada. "Pharmacy Competition in Canada." Government of Canada, 2023. https://www.competitionbureau.gc.ca/eic/site/cb-bc.nsf/eng/home
  1. Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH). "CADTH Reimbursement Review: Semaglutide." CADTH, 2023. https://www.cadth.ca/semaglutide
  1. Government of Canada. "Provincial and Territorial Drug Benefit Programs." Government of Canada, 2024. https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/health-care-system/pharmaceuticals/access-insurance-coverage-prescription-medicines/provincial-territorial-public-drug-benefit-programs.html
  1. Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH). "Pharmacoeconomic Review: Semaglutide." CADTH, 2023. https://www.cadth.ca/semaglutide